The camera never lies Decide which answer (A; B, C or D) best fits each gap.
Arthur Conan Doyle. . . himself to be a rational man. A) esteemed B) regarded C) viewed D) believed
In 1920, when he saw photographs of fairies taken in a garden. . . , he thought he was seeing proof that these tiny creatures really existed. A) venue B) setting C) background D) surrounding
He published the photographs alongside an article he wrote, . . . fairies as supernatural wonders. A) calling B) naming C) attributing D) acknowledging
It was not until 1939 that the two ladies who took the photos admitted that they were. . . A) false B) faulty C) fake D) fictional
They simply cut out pictures of fairies from a book and. . . them among flowers. A) arranged B) spaced C) settled D) distributed
The results are. . . beautiful. A) categorically B) unavoidably C) substantially D) undeniably
But the simplicity of the trick. . . a basic principle of photography, that the camera cannot lie. A) weakens B) undermines C) demolishes D) dismantles
Today we are used to computer software. . . us to rework our digital images. A) letting B) supporting C) enabling D) empowering
It is a. . . that photography ever had a true age of innocence. From the moment cameras began capturing reality, that reality was being altered. A) fantasy B) legend C) dream D) myth